Credit-slip-authorizing apparatus



\ A. C. KIRSHNER.

CREDIT SLIP AUTHORIZING APPARATUS.

' APPLICATION FILED DEC.I9, 1919.

Patented July 26, 1921.

2 SHEETS-SHEET I.

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11911 5 DVMOMO' I w 14' 10m VAE' I NKIOHM DUE V II 1 5110a u foz Afthur C. Kinhner ,A RINGINGANDSTAMPI 'TALKING I 1 W COMMON -Mom 121 .1 FLASH A. C. KIRSHNER.

CREDIT SLIP AUTHORIZING APPARATUS.

APPLICATION FILED DEC.19, 1919.

1,385,788. Patented July 26, 1921.

2 SHEETSSHEET 2.

THE ROE CO.

DAYTON oa-uo SOLD TO MR.JOHN [DE 14 N. 10TH. AVE. DAY 0.

UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.

ARTHUR C. KIRSHNER, E: DAYTON, OHIO, ASSIGNOR TO THE NATIONAL CASH REGISTER COMPANY, OF DAYTON, OHI O.

GREDIT-SLIP-AUTHORIZING APPARATUS.

Specification of Letters Patent.

Patented July 26, 1921.

Application filed December 19, 1919. Serial No. 346,145.

To all whom it may concern Be it known that I, ARTHUR C. KIRSHNER,

v a citizen of the United States, residing at Dayton, in the county of Montgomery and State of Ohio, have invented certainv new and useful, Improvements in Credit-Slip tion is to provide means carried by the customer to identify himself.

Another object is to provide means whereby a credit sale may not be authorized without the identifying means.

A further object is to print the customers name and address and other appropriate 1nformation on the sales slip.

With these and incidental objects in view, the invention consists in certain novel features of construction and combinations of parts, the essential elements of which are set forth in appended claims, and a preferred form of embodiment of which is hereinafter described with reference to the drawings which accompany and form part of the specification.

Of said figures:

Figure 1 is a reduced gerspect ve View of the clerks telephone an stamplng devlce.

Fig.2 is a diagram of the electrlcal connections of the clerks telephone and stampin device.

ig. 3 is a sectional view through the clerks telephone and stamp1ng dev1ce and shows the means whereby the sales slip 1s stamped and punched on a credit transaction.

Fig. 4 is a detail top plan view of the stamping mechanism and shows the 'mechanical means by which the c1rcu1t controlling the stamping is closed. 0

Fig. 5 is a detail view of the ldentlfymg device to be carried by the customer.

Fi 6 is across section taken on the line A- of Fig. 5, looking in the direction of the arrows.

Fig. 7 is a modified form of identifying plate on which the customers name and address are engraved instead of being stamped as in the plate shown in Fig. 6.

Fig. 8 is a detail view of the adapted to be ing device.

The present invention is shown applied to the credit slipfauthorizing apparatus which is shown and described in Letters Patent of the United States, No. 1,321,900, granted November 18th, 1919, to Herbert G. Dorsey type of sli printed by the clerks stamp and Arthur C. Kirshner, and reference is made thereto for a full and complete descript1o n of the said apparatus. However, a brief description of the system in which the apparatus shown in the Dorsey and Kirshner patent 1s used, will be included here for the purpose of making the present invention more easily understood. The system includes telephonic and other means of electrical com- ,munication between a clerk and the person who is authorized to extend credit, as well as an electrically operated mechanism under control of the credit man for prlnting on and punching an inserted sales slip. The comv plete' transaction is as follows.

When a customer desires credit, the clerk fills out a sales slip with the customers name, address and other appropriate information and then depresses one of a plurality of keys, located ,in the punching mechanism. The depression of this key through suitable electrical connections lights a lamp in a switchboard at the credit authorizers station informing him that communication is desired. He then gets into telephonic communication with the clerk who informs him of the name of the customer desirin credit. The clerk then inserts the sales sl1p into themachine,

the slip closing the contact which lights a llght on the switchboard at the authorizers station indicating that the sales slip is in position to be stamped. If the credit is to be extended, the authorizer then presses a key which through suitable connections to be described later, actuates the stamping and punching means.

It can be seen from the above that while it is possible to give the clerk authorization before she completes a sale on credit, unless she knows the customer personally, there is nothing to prevent any one from charging goods under the name of some one else who is known to be a patron of the store.

The present invention is designed to make this impossible by providing each regular customer with a means of identification. The

to the date and clerks station number which are printed by the type wheels carried in the stamping device. Mechanism is also provided to enforce the insertion of the customers identification plate before the stamping mechanism can be actuated. I

The clerks telephone and stamping device will now be described. It comprises a receiver 15 and .a transmitter 16 mounted upon opposite ends of a handle or grip 17. lVhen not in use it is carried by a hook 19 pivotally mounted near the top of a casing 20. Slidably mounted in the casing 20 are a plural- 'ity of keys 21, the depression of any one of which is adapted, through suitable electrical connections, to light a lamp on a credit authorizers switchboard to indicate that communication is desired. As the above devices form no part of the present invention and are fully shown and described in the Dorsey and Kirshner patent, no further description thereof will be included herein.

The sales slip to'be stamped is inserted under a frame 22 (Figs. 1 and 3) in which are supported the date wheels 23 (Fig. 4). The frame 22 is mounted on a plate 24'and supported by brackets 25 and 26 fast on the cabinet 20. A plate 27 (Figs. 5 and 6) of thin sheet metal, has its edges bent to form angles 77 which cooperate with the sides of the slots formed in members 72 and 73, into which it is adapted to be inserted. The plate 27 in the preferred form carries type which is formed thereon by the well known method used in connection with the addressograph. A projection 74 on the right hand end (Fig. 5) of the plate is for the purpose of grasping the plate to insert it into and remove it from the machine.

This form of plate is of course only illustrative and in Fig. 7 a difl'erent form is shown. In this form the plate has a solid body' on the face of which the type may be engraved or formed in any other desired manner. On the back of this type of plate there is fastened a thin plate 75 which has the same information thereon that is printed by the type. This information is visible when the plate is in the markin device through the opening therein. platen lever 26 (Figs. 3 and .4) is operated un-- der the control of the credit authorizer to carry the sales slip against a customers identification plate 27 and the date type carriers 23, the printed impression on the slip showing that the credit is authorized. The platen lever 26 is loose on a cross rod 28 mounted on depending portions 29 of the plate 24, and its rear end is provided with. an opening through which a pin 30, mounted in the upper end of a core 31 of a solenoid 32, projects. The solenoid 32 is mounted on the depending portions 33 and 34 of the plate 24. lVhen a credit is to be extended the credit authorizer closes a circuit which energizes the solenoid 32 whereupon the core 31 is drawn down to operate the platen lever 26 to make a printed impression on the sales slip from the customers identification .plate 27 and the date type carriers 23 as shown in Fig. 8. An opening 7 O is made in the frame 22 j ustover the slot therein, in which the customers identification plate 27 is inserted. By looking through this opening the clerk is able to look at the back of the plate and read the name of the customer before the authorization is made.

The downward movement of the core 31 is limited by engagement of its lower end with a block 35 seated in a stationary core member 36. The block 35 prevents the conical surface of the lower end of the core 31 from contacting with the sides of a correspondingly shaped hole in the upper end of the stationary core member 36 which might the core 31 in operated position after the solenoid is deenergized.

The date wheels 23 are mounted on the left hand ends of nested sleeves as is well known in the art, and said sleeves carrying at their right hand ends (Fig. 4) knurled disks with the various days, months and years engraved on their respective peripheries'to enable the date type wheels to be set to any desired date. The type on the customers identification plate and the date type carriers is inked by means of an ink ribbon 37 which passes from a spool 38 around a roll 39 around another roll 40 and is received on a spool 41. No mechanism is shown or described for feeding the ink ribbon or reversing the same as this mechanism is well known in the art and any suitable form thereof may be used with the present invention. The advantages to the auditing department of having the correct name and address printed on the sales slip are plain. It prevents any confusion of one customer with another due to an error by the clerk in writing the name and also insures that the delivery man will have correct information. A punching mechanism is also provided for making perforations in the sales slip to indicaite to the ofiice that the sale was authorize It is usual when the goods purchased are left by the customer for delivery by the store p-us to send a delivery slip with the goods to the delivery department, the delivery slip having the address and any other desired information. In order to notify the delivery department that the sale has been authorized punching means is provided for perforating the delivery slip. The advantage of having the customers correct name and address printed on the delivery slip by the stamping device 1s very apparent. The perforations for indicating that the credit sale has been authorized are made by suitable punches carried by a punch head adapted to slide in the plate 24 and operated by a punch arm 43 which is pivoted at 44, its'right hand end being slotted over a pin in the bottom of the punch head and its left hand end also being slotted to engage the pin 30 carried by the core 31 of the solenoid 32. It can be seen from Fig. 3 that when the solenoid is energized by the credit authorizer and the core is drawn down to its lowered position the arm 43 will be rocked counter-clockwise on its pivot 44 and thereby raise the punch head and cause the delivery slip to be perforated thereby. The details of the punching mechanism are neither shown nor described herein and reference may be had to the hereinbefore mentioned patent. A metal box 85 is mounted on the plate 24 and is adapted to receive the punchings. This box 85 is fastened to the plate 24 only by the screw 71 so that it may be easily detached for emptying. I

Mechanism is provided to make it impos sible to energize the solenoid 32 until a sales slip and a customers identification plate have been inserted in the machine. The mechanism for accomplishing this will now be described. Fast in a block 46 are two spring contacts 47 and 48 which are normally open. A lever 49 is pivoted in the plate 24, the lower end of said lever engaging the contact 48 while the upper end projects slightly above the plate 24. When the sales slip is inserted under the frame 22 it strikes the lever 49 and rocks the same on its pivot thereby raising the contract 48 until it engages the contact 47.

On the opposite side of the plate 24 is a block 50 (Fig. 4) similar to the block 46 and carrying spring contacts 51 and'52 normally open. A lever 53 is pivoted near its center to the frame 22 and at one end is bent to engage the underside of the contact 51. When the customers identification plate 27 is inserted in the machine it strikes the opposite end of the Ever 53 and rocks the lever slightly thereby raising the contact 51 into engagement with the contact 5-2.

A full description of the electric circuits which control the operation of the telephone and stamping device is given in the before mentioned Dorsey and Kirshner patent and reference can be made thereto if desired.

The only circuit which it is thought necessary to describe herein is the one for energizing the solenoid 32. This circuit is as follows; From the generator, through a switch80 at the credit authorizers desk (see the hereinbefore mentioned patent), wire 60, terminal 61, Wire 62, wire 63, contact 51, contact 52, these being the contacts closed by the insertion of the customers identification plate 27, wire 64, contacts 47 and 48, closed by insertion of the sales slip, wire 65, solenoid 32, wire 66, wire 67, terminal 68, and common negative wire 69 back to the generator. When a slipand customers plate are inserted properly the pairs of 80 contacts 47 and 48, and 51 and 52 will be closed and the circuit for energizing the solenoid 32 will be in condition to be closed by 1ghe switch 80 at the credit authorizers des It is apparent from the above that the circuit for energizing the solenoid and thereby stamping and punching the sales slip cannot be closed until both a sales slip and a customers identification plate are inserted in the stamping device. As pointed out above, this makes it impossible for anyone except the customer having the identification plate or his authorized representative to obtain credit.

While the form of mechanism herein shown and described, is admirably adapted to fulfil the objects primarily stated, it is to be understood that it is not intended to confine the invention to the one form of em- 100 bodiment herein disclosed, for it is susceptible of embodiment in various forms all coming within the scope of the claims which follow.

What is claimed is 1 1. In a store system, the combination of a marking device, a controlling means therefor, and a plurality of means located in the marking device whereby the controlling means is normally ineffective.

2. In a store system, the combination of a marking device, a normally inoperative controlling means therefor, and a plurality of means located in the marking device operable for rendering the controlling means 115 operative.

3. In a store system, the combination of a marking device, actuating means therefor, normally ineffective controlling means for the actuating means, and a plurality of 129 other means operable for rendering the controlling means operative.

4. In credit slip authorizing apparatus, the combination of means for printing on an inserted slip, actuating means therefor, 125 electrically operated means for controlling the actuating means, means for normally disabling the controlling means, and an insertible type carrier, the insertion of which in combination with a sales slip, in the print- 180 ing means renders the controlling means effective.

5. In credit slip authorizing apparatus, the combination of a marking device, actuating means therefor, controlling means for the actuating means, a type plate adapted to be inserted in the marking device, means whereby the controllin means is normally ineffective, and means W ereby the insertion of a sales slip and the type plate in the marking device renders the controlling means effective.

6. In credit slip authorizing apparatus, the combination of a marking device, actuating means controlled by an electric circuit, two pairs of spring contacts, normally open, in the circuit for controlling the actuatlng means, a type carryingplate adapted to be inserted in the marking device, the insertion of said plate closing one of the before mentioned spring contacts, and means whereby the insertion of a sales slip in the marking device closes the other of said spring contacts so that when an electric current passes through the circult the actuating means for the marking device W111 be operated.

7. In a device of the class described, the combination of an inking and impression means, an insertible type plate, and supporting means for holding said plate 11). printing position, and having a sight opening whereby said printing plate may be viewed.

8. In a device'of the class described, the combination of inking and impression means, an insertible type plate bearing type on one face for printing certain information, said plate being further constructed that the same information will appear on the reverse side in reading form, and supporting means for holding said plate in printing position, and having a sight opening whereby the information on said reverse side may be viewed.

' 9. In a device of the class described, the combination of inking and impression means, an insertible type plate, supporting means for holding said plate in printing position, and having 'a sight opening whereby said printing plate may be viewed, and means for preventing an operation of the impression means when a printing plate is not in proper printing position.

10. In a device of the class described, the combination of inking and impression means, an insertible type plate bearing type on one face for printing certain information, said plate being further constructed that the same information will appear onthe reverse side in reading form, supporting means for holding said plate in printing position, and having a sight opening whereby the information on said reverse side may be viewed, and

means for preventing an operation of the impression means when a printing plate is not in proper printing position.

11. In a device of the class described, the combination of an inking and impression means, an insertible type plate bearing type on one face for printing certain information,

said plate having the same information on the reverse side in reading form, and supporting means for holding said plate in printing position, and having a sight opening whereby the information on said reverse side may be viewed.

12. In a device of the class described, the combination of inking and impression means, an insertible type plate bearing type on one face for printing certain data, said plate being further constructed that the same data will appear on the reverse side in reading form, and supporting means for holding said plate in printing position.

13. In a device of the class described, the combination of inking and impression means, an insertible type plate, supporting means for holding sald plate in printing position and means for preventing an operation of the impression means when a printing plate 1s not 1n proper printing position.

14. In a device of the class described, the combination of inking and impression means, an lnsertible type plate bearing type on one face for printing certain data, said plate being further constructed that the same data will appear on the reverse side in readin' form, supporting means for holding said plate in printing position, and means for preventing an operation of the impression means when a printing plate is not in proper printing position.

15. In a marking device, the combination of impression means, electro-magnetic means for actuating the impression means, and a circuit including a plurality of switches operable in a normal operation of the device.

16. In a marking device, the combination of impression means, an insertible type plate cooperating therewith, electro-magnetic means for actuating said impression means, and a circuit including a plurality of switches operable in a normal operation of the device.

17. In a marking device, the combination of impression means, an insertible type plate, electro-magnetic means for actuating the impression means to take an impremion from said insertible type plate, an electric circuit for controlling the electro-magnetic means, a switch located in said circuit and adapted to be operated to close said circuit, and a plurality of switches also located in said circuit whereby said first mentioned switch is rendered normally ineffective.

18. In a marking device, the combination located in said circuit whereby said first mentioned switch is rendered normally in- 10 effective, and means whereby the insertion of said insertible type plate and a sales slip will close said second mentioned switches. v

In testimony whereof I aflix my signature.

- ARTHUR C. KIRSHNER. 

